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         American First Ladies Biographies:     more books (100)
  1. Abigail Adams (American Women of Achievement) by Angela Osborne, 1988-08
  2. Eleanor Roosevelt: A Life of Happiness and Tears (American Cavalcade) by William Jay Jacobs, 1981-06
  3. Hillary Rodham Clinton: What Every American Should Know by American Conservative Union, 2005-09-30
  4. American Evita: Hillary Clinton's Path to Power by Christopher Andersen, 2005-08-01
  5. Martha Washington: An American Life by Patricia Brady, 2006-05-30
  6. Unlimited Partners: Our American STory by Bob Dole, Elizabeth Dole, et all 2001-03-23
  7. Great American Presidents Set (Great American Presidents) by Michael Foley, Samuel Willard Crompton, et all 2005-09-30
  8. A Perfect Union: Dolley Madison and the Creation of the American Nation by Catherine Allgor, 2007-02-20
  9. First Ladies: A Biographical Dictionary (Facts on File Library of American History) by Dorothy Schneider, Carl J. Schneider, 2005-07-15
  10. Faith of the First Ladies by Jerry MacGregor, Marie Prys, 2006-02-01
  11. Our Country's First Ladies by Ann Bausum, 2007-01-09
  12. A Lady, First: My Life in the Kennedy White House and the American Embassies of Paris and Rome by Letitia Baldrige, 2002-10-01
  13. First Lady from Plains by Rosalynn Carter, 1994-12
  14. First Ladies Cookbook by Margaret Brown Klapthor, 1987-08-13

61. Explore DC: First Ladies
The evolution of the role of the american first lady has been a historic marker for our The first ladies have been a true symbol of the american woman,
http://www.exploredc.org/index.php?id=62

62. Oxford University Press: American National Biography: Mark C. Carnes
Told more as stories than history lessons, the biographies in american National New biographies not in the original set as well as articles first
http://www.us.oup.com/us/catalog/general/subject/Reference/Subjectareareference/

63. Smithsonian Presidents And First Ladies (DK) Doi:10.1221/0789484544
BIOGRAPHY AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Women. The Smithsonian Presidents and first ladies Eleanor Roosevelt Eleanor Roosevelt first ladies american Edition
http://dx.doi.org/10.1221/0789484544
Please click on the choices below to learn more about this item: Smithsonian Presidents and First Ladies
Author(s): Barber, James and Pastan, Amy
Format: Hardcover
DOI: 10.1221/0789484544

64. The Smithsonian Presidents And First Ladies (DK) Doi:10.1221/0789484536
BIOGRAPHY AUTOBIOGRAPHY / Women. first ladies american Edition Smithsonian Presidents and first ladies. JUVENILE NONFICTION / Biography Autobiography
http://dx.doi.org/10.1221/0789484536
Please click on the choices below to learn more about this item: The Smithsonian Presidents and First Ladies
Author(s): Barber, James and Pastan, Amy
Format: Softcover
DOI: 10.1221/0789484536

65. WSSLinks: [Topic]
African american Women Writers of the 19th Century Digital Schomburg National first ladies Library Site highlighting the library dedicated in 1998 in
http://www.library.arizona.edu/users/dickstei/acrlwsshistory
Women's Studies Section
WSSLinks
Women's History
Welcome to Women's History], part of WSSLinks , developed and maintained by the
Women's Studies Section
of the Association of College and Research Libraries This page will list annotated links of various comprehensive sources of U.S. and global women's history. Be sure to also check out Archival Sites for Women's Studies also on WSSLINKS. Comprehensive Sites Ancient Times Medieval and Renaissance American History ... Women's History Speeches/Speakers/Performers
Comprehensive Sites
Internet Women's History Sourcebook
Contains full text of a wide range of primary source materials as well as secondary texts related to women in ancient history, early European history, modern European history, Latin America, United States, Asia, Afria, and Australia.
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/women/womensbook.html
ViVa: A Bibliography of Women's History in Historical and Women's Studies Journals
ViVa is a current bibliography of articles about women's and gender history. Articles published in English, French, German, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian, and Swedish are selected from 167 European, American, Canadian, Asian, Australian and New Zealand journals.
http://www.iisg.nl/~womhist/vivabout.html

66. Gale - Free Resources - Women's History - Biographies - Hillary Rodham Clinton
american first lady, attorney, politician, Senator Rodham Clinton Activist first Lady, Enslow Publishers, 1994. U·X·L® biographies, U·X·L, 1996.
http://www.galegroup.com/free_resources/whm/bio/clinton_h.htm
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Women's History
Hillary Rodham Clinton
Born 1947
American first lady, attorney, politician, Senator "I think that you have to keep true to your own beliefs about what is important.... But you always have to be open to new ways of saying it that perhaps are understood better."
Introduction
Hillary Rodham Clinton follows in the tradition of Eleanor Roosevelt as a first lady who uses her position as a platform for social change. Clinton became the 42nd first lady of the United States on January 20, 1993, when her husband, Bill Clinton, a former governor of Arkansas, took the presidential inaugural oath. A nationally known activist on education and children's issues, a mother, and a trusted political adviser to her husband, Hillary Clinton has chaired an Arkansas state commission on education, served on dozens of corporate and civic boards, and made a career as one of America's leading attorneys. She was named one of the nation's top 100 lawyers by the

67. Important Women Through History
She is the first female African american to receive a doctorate from the Massachusetts http//distinguishedwomen.com/biographies/ joynerk.html
http://teacher.scholastic.com/activities/women/notable.htm
Scholastic Home About Us Site Map Search ... National Women's History Project A List of Women Achievers
Honor Roll Home
A List of Women Achievers Explore this list of over 30 women of achievement. You can nominate one of these women or someone else to the Honor Roll of Notable Women This page includes links outside of Scholastic.com
Q-Z
Louisa May Alcott:
Author who produced the first literature for the mass market of juvenile girls in the 19th century. Her most popular, Little Women , was just one of 270 works that she published.
Susan B. Anthony:
Clara Barton:
Clara Barton got involved with tending the needy when she treated injured Union soldiers on the battlefield during the Civil War. She later was the founder and first president of the American Red Cross.
Elizabeth Blackwell:
Pearl S. Buck:
With her novels about American and Asian culture, she became the first woman to win the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Cleopatra: Queen of Egypt and the last pharaoh. She was 17 or 18 when she became queen. Cleopatra was a shrewd politician who spoke nine languages. During her reign, Egypt became closely aligned with the Roman Empire. http://www.royalty.nu/Africa/Egypt/Cleopatra.html

68. The Learning Place - Links
the WASPS were the first women to ever fly american military aircraft. biographies of american women veterans from each major military conflict
http://www.nwhp.org/tlp/links/links.html
nwhp@nwhp.org . We will give it careful consideration. Categories General/Overviews
Politics

Art and Music

Aviation
...
World History
    General/Overview
  • Cobblestone Publishing
    A wide variety of primary and secondary resources for young readers. Choose from an award-winning selection of magazines in the social sciences and science, and check out their books and teachers' resources.
  • Women Who Changed History
    Scholastic celebrates Women's History month with projects and activities. In addition to online explorations and classroom discussions, students share their own thoughts and opinions as they contribute to our understanding of women's place in history. Scholastic celebrates Women's History month with projects and activities. In addition to online explorations and classroom discussions, students share their own thoughts and opinions as they contribute to our understanding of women's place in history.

  • URL: http://www.legacy98.org

  • profiles of women you'll want to know.
    URL: members.home.net/teriann/weekly.htm

69. First Ladies - Specific Groups - Biography & Memoirs - Books - Wal-Mart
The first full biography of Jackie Onassis since her death offers Eleanor Roosevelt first Lady Creators of the american Mind Series, Volume II
http://www.walmart.com/catalog/product_listing.gsp?cat=19002&path=0:3920:18563:1

70. Eleanor Roosevelt | American First Lady & Humanitarian
While first Lady, she went on nationwide lecture tours, and held over 350 Click here to purchase this Video edition of Biography Eleanor Roosevelt
http://www.lucidcafe.com/library/95oct/roosevel.html
var dc_PublisherID = 72; var dc_UnitID = 14; var dc_AdLinkColor = 'blue'; Resources Menu Categorical Index Library Gallery
Eleanor Roosevelt
No one can make you feel inferior without your consent.
(Anna) Eleanor Roosevelt
was born on October 11, 1884 in New York. Her family called her Eleanor. She was the wife of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, but won fame in her own right for her humanitarian work, and as a role a model for women in public life. One of her most noted quotations, and an excellent reflection of her attitude about life is: "It's better to light a candle than to curse the darkness." Eleanor married a distant cousin, Franklin Roosevelt, in 1905. When her husband was stricken with polio in 1921 she began to work on his behalf, making frequent fact-finding trips during his terms as governor of New York, and later as President. While First Lady, she went on nationwide lecture tours, and held over 350 press conferences for woman reporters only. She wrote a daily newspaper column and articles for many magazines. Eleanor was also a civil rights activist during her husband's tenure as President. Roosevelt served as a United States delegate to the United Nations General Assembly from 1945 to 1951. In 1946 she was elected chairman of the UN's Human Rights Commission. She helped draft the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights. In 1961 she returned to the General Assembly. Later in 1961 President John F. Kennedy appointed her head of the Commission on the Status of Women.

71. American President
first Lady Edith Bolling Galt Wilson President Woodrow Wilson. first Lady Biography Like other american housewives, she wore thrift clothing,
http://www.americanpresident.org/history/woodrowwilson/firstlady/
Your name Email City State Question Presidency in History Woodrow Wilson First Lady Biography document.write(""); Presidency in History Biography First Lady Cabinet ... Presidency in Action search:
First Lady: Edith Bolling Galt Wilson
President: Woodrow Wilson
First Lady: Biography
Edith Bolling Wilson, Woodrow Wilson's second wife, is sometimes described as America's first woman President because of the role she played after the President's massive stroke in October 1919. Choosing to admit or turn away visitors and deciding what papers Wilson did or did not see, she was a controversial figure at the time and has remained so ever since. For her part, Edith Wilson described her role as that of a steward. She wrote in her 1939 memoirs that as First Lady, she "never made a single decision regarding the disposition of public affairs." In fact, she claimed powers over only "what was important and what was not" and "when to present matters to my husband." Edith was introduced to the President in early 1915, about six months after the death of Ellen Axson Wilson, his first wife. Wilson liked her at once and began sharing state secrets with her in an effort to charm her. After a brief but passionate courtship, the two became secretly engaged. But Wilson's political advisers felt that his remarriage less than a year after the death of Ellen Wilson would offend the American public and damage his reelection prospects; they even concocted a scheme to prevent him from marrying Edith. Despite their machinations, the couple was married in December 1915.

72. American President
Presidency in History, , John Adams, , first Lady, , Biography first Lady Abigail Smith Adams President John Adams. first Lady Biography
http://www.americanpresident.org/history/johnadams/firstlady/
Your name Email City State Question Presidency in History John Adams First Lady Biography document.write(""); Presidency in History Biography First Lady Cabinet ... Presidency in Action search:
First Lady: Abigail Smith Adams
President: John Adams
First Lady: Biography
Abigail Adams is probably best remembered for urging her husband, John Adams, to "Remember the Ladies." At a time when John was working on the Declaration of Independence, Abigail specifically lobbied her husband to, "be more generous and favorable to [the Ladies] than your ancestors. Do not put such unlimited power into the hands of the Husbands. Remember all Men would be tyrants if they could. If particular care and attention is not paid to the Ladies we are determined to foment a Rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any Laws in which we have no voice, or Representation . . ." Although John disagreed with Abigail on such matters, he nevertheless saw her as a lifetime partner and confidante. Abigail's enduring support, advice, and insightful political observations prompted John to call her his "dearest Partner" and "best, dearest, worthiest, wisest friend in this World." On top of that, he noted, Abigail shone "as a Stateswoman." These self-imposed limits notwithstanding, Abigail continued to lobby for improvements in female education and battled the assumed inferiority of women. Writing that she would never consent to having those of "her sex" considered inferior, she advocated letting "each planet shine in their own orbit." But her earlier strident calls for husband John to "Remember the Ladies" abated somewhat over time. Abigail noted that the "Government of States and Kingdoms, tho' God knows badly enough managed . . . should be solely administered by the Lords."

73. Abigail Adams: Biography And Much More From Answers.com
View Poster Abigail Adams , US first Lady Born 11 November 1744 Birthplace american History. Adams, Abigail. (17441818), writer and first Lady.
http://www.answers.com/topic/abigail-adams
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Arts Business Entertainment Games ... More... On this page: Personalities Dictionary Encyclopedia Works US History Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Abigail Adams Personalities View Poster Abigail Adams U.S. First Lady
  • Born: 11 November 1744 Birthplace: Weymouth, Massachusetts Died: 28 October 1818 (typhoid fever) Best Known As: Wife of President John Adams
Name at birth: Abigail Smith Abigail Adams was the wife of the 2nd U.S. president, John Adams , and the mother of the 6th U.S. president, John Quincy Adams . Abigail was descended on her mother's side from the Quincys, a prominent New England family. She married John Adams, then a lawyer, in 1764, and they spent much of their early life apart as John Adams travelled as a circuit judge and then became a key player in the American Revolution. Their fond, newsy and philosophical letters to one another during these absences have become famous both as evidence of a deep love affair and as a source of information about the Revolutionary era. Abigail lived briefly in Paris and London as John Adams served as U.S. ambassador to France and England, and she became a friend to First Lady Martha Washington when John Adams became the country's first vice-president under George Washington . John Adams became president in 1797, and after his single term ended in 1801 he and Abigail retired to their home in Quincy, Massachusetts. Abigail Adams died of typhoid fever in 1818; seven years later, in 1825, her son John Quincy became president.

74. Eleanor Roosevelt: Biography And Much More From Answers.com
Biography from a collection of profiles on famous women american diplomat, writer, and first Lady of the United States (1933–1945) as the wife of
http://www.answers.com/topic/eleanor-roosevelt
showHide_TellMeAbout2('false'); Arts Business Entertainment Games ... More... On this page: Personalities Dictionary Encyclopedia History Works WordNet US History Wikipedia Mentioned In Or search: - The Web - Images - News - Blogs - Shopping Eleanor Roosevelt Personalities View Poster Eleanor Roosevelt U.S. First Lady / Humanitarian
  • Born: 11 October 1884 Birthplace: New York, New York Died: 7 November 1962 (bone marrow cancer) Best Known As: Active and influential First Lady
Name at Birth: Anna Eleanor Roosevelt Eleanor Roosevelt was the niece of Teddy Roosevelt , and a distant cousin to Franklin Delano Roosevelt , whom she married in 1905. Eleanor was active in Democratic politics and helped to shape her husband's New Deal programs while he was president. After FDR's death, she continued to lecture and write, advocating racial equality, women's rights and world peace. From 1945 to 1953, she was the United States delegate to the United Nations. She is considered one of the most active and influential First Ladies in U.S. history. Eleanor and Franklin Roosevelt were married on 17 March 1905 in New York City... They had five children who lived to adulthood: Anna (b. 1906), James (b. 1907), Elliott (b. 1910), Franklin Jr. (b. 1914), and John (b. 1916); another child, also named Franklin, was born in 1909 but died in infancy... Eleanor Roosevelt resigned from the Daughters of the American Revolution in 1939 after the DAR refused to let African-American

75. Biography Of First Lady Pat Nixon
The future first Lady had a childhood with no luxuries except that of a warm and At home, Mrs. Nixon reached out to the american people by inviting them
http://www.nixonfoundation.org/Research_Center/Nixons/PatNixon.shtml

76. Famous Kansans, Women
She one of the first american women to travel the trail and she also kept one See a short biography. Wichita s Lynette Woodard became the first female
http://www.kshs.org/people/women.htm
Notable Kansas Women
Anthony, Susan B.
Baker, Nancy Landon Kassebaum
Beech, Olive Ann
Brooks, Louise ...
Woodard, Lynette
"Any man who voted against 'female suffrage' was a blockhead," Susan B. Anthony declared in 1867. A nationally known supporter of women's rights, Anthony spent time in Kansas campaigning for women to secure the right to vote. She is featured in a short biography Nancy Landon Kassebaum Baker was the first Kansas woman to serve in the U.S. Senate and the first woman to be elected to a full term in the Senate in her own right. Born in Topeka, she received degrees from the University of Kansas and the University of Michigan. She was elected as a Republican to the United States Senate in 1978 where she served until 1997, when she retired from political office. Olive Ann Beech is universally recognized as the "First Lady of Aviation." Introduced to aviation in 1924, she devoted her career to Beech Aircraft, the company she co-founded in Wichita in 1932 with her husband, Walter. She brought the company through fifty years of growth from the Staggerwing Biplane to Skylab, and from ten employees to ten thousand. She is featured with her husband in a short biography Louise Brooks was a dancer and silent-film actress, appearing in two dozen films in the 1920s and 1930s. Disenchanted with the American film industry, at age 24 she went to Europe where G.W. Pabst directed her in "Pandora's Box" and "Diary of a Lost Girl" in 1929. Both films are now considered classics, and Brooks is a cult figure of early European films. Louise Brooks is featured in the

77. Women Of The American Civil War Era
in the american West and Civil War, first published as TO FORM A MORE PERFECT UNION in 1941, The biography will be a useful addition to any collection,
http://americancivilwar.com/women/women.html
Women of the American Civil War
DVD
Women and the Civil War
Harriet Beecher Stowe

Clara Barton

Rose O'Neal Greenhow

Dr. Mary Edwards Walker
...
Carrie Berry Diary

Harriet Beecher Stowe
Clara Barton
Rose O'Neal Greenhow Confederate Spy Petersburg, Va. Cottage of Col. Nathaniel Michler Young Heroes of History Series -Reading level: Ages 9-12 Send 'Em South is an adventure story that brings the two conflicting worlds of North and South together. In the years just prior to the Civil War, David Adams grows up in the middle of two worlds. His father is an Irish immigrant who is ridiculed and ignored by the people of Boston. His mother is an abolitionist who has dedicated her life to ending slavery. David, as the son of these two, finds himself an outcast amongst his friends and even his family. The second in Alan N. Kay's Young Heroes of History series, On the Trail of John Brown's Body, is every bit as good as the first. Whereas that book juxtaposed the plight of a slave family and a northern family filled with abolitionists and sympathetics, this book follows the adventures of two boys and their fathers as they journey to the Kansas Territory in the days when John Brown cast the longest shadow in the land. Disgusted by the violence of the John Brown raid, George Adams adopts the state of Virginia and its cause as his own. The war does not go well for the South, and when the North's cannons destroy the city, George is horrified. Then, when he finds a poor starving girl, George realizes that he is the only one that can save her. Off to Fight is a story of growing up. It is a story of the brutality of war and the kindness that takes place in the middle of such horrors.

78. Biography/Autobiography
BIOGRAPHY Based on the popular Arts and Entertainment television program, On February 20, 1962, John Glenn was the first american to orbit the earth.
http://home.earthlink.net/~jesmith/BiogAutobiog.html
Biography/Autobiography
Biography is history
seen through the prism
of a person
- - - - - Louis Fletcher
RESOURCES
  • AUTHORS
  • BIOGRAPHY Based on the popular Arts and Entertainment television program, this site features a quiz game and over 15,000 biographical entries.
  • Biographical Dictionary The 25,000 entries in this dictionary may be searched by year, literary and artistic works, notable achievements, occupations, etc. There are ideas for teachers to use this site with their students and a very challenging interactive quiz, the Master Biographer Challenge
  • Biography Maker A clear, step-by-step guide to help students write lively biography reports.
  • Distinguished Women of Past and Present All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
  • Inventors and Inventions
  • Inventor of the Week Archives from MIT's Invention Dimension and now. . . Extra Credit Assignment: Inventive Minds
  • POTUS - Presidents of the United States
  • Timeline of the American Civil Rights Movement A timeline, photos, and brief overview of the people and events which shaped the Civil Rights Movement.
  • 79. Laura Bush - First Lady Biography & Information - WHITEHOUSE.ORG
    Officious Biography of the first Lady of the United States of America. Mrs. George W. Bush ( Laura ) makes voters proud to be an american once again.
    http://www.whitehouse.org/administration/laura.asp
    White House Home Newsroom Department of Faith Homeland Security ... Contact Subscribe
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    Bush/Cheney 2004 George Bush Mrs. Bush ... Mrs. Bush MRS. GEORGE W. BUSH ("Laura")
    When describing First Lady Mrs. George W. Bush ("Laura"), it is appropriate on countless levels to defer to the superior psychophysical summary offered by her husband, President George W. Bush: "She doesn't try to steal the limelight." Indeed, Mrs. Bush is in many ways most noteworthy for her intensely admirable inclination to allow her husband to methodically overshadow each and every element of her unfortunately female being. Such is the way and the path of a goodly Republican first lady. As Peggy Noonan, the wordsmith for Ronald Reagan, the greatest man who ever lived (that didn't wind up on a cross), once said, a First Lady should strive to be like the glistening, waxing moon. She neither seeks nor has a light of her own. Instead, she is made happy by simply reflecting the shining example of her Christian husband. She makes his luminance, no matter how seemingly faint, more visible to those who walk along the path of life so often darkened by failed liberal social programs and uninsured children who get sick too often. With a plaintive face that seemed inspired by the dusty prairies of bucolic Texas, Laura Welch was born in Midland, Texas on November 4, 1946. The daughter of a carpenter father and a housewife mother not unlike Joseph and Mary themselves, Laura learned early to happily adhere to the traditional gender roles that would one day make her an object of feverish desire for Stetson-wearing alpha males. A popular girl, high school saw Laura blossom into an accomplished dancer and enthusiastic consumer of the fine, life-affirming tobacco products of the RJ Reynolds Corporation. In the fall of 1963, Laura narrowly averted a life of pointless obscurity, when she ran a stop sign and collided with another vehicle, inflicting a fatal neck fracture on Mike Douglas, a then-serious boyfriend not genetically affiliated with a burgeoning political dynasty.

    80. Eleanor Roosevelt Biography
    Eleanor Roosevelt. first Lady of the World However, with american entry in World War I, she became active in the american Red Cross and in volunteer
    http://www.fdrlibrary.marist.edu/erbio.html
    Eleanor Roosevelt
    "First Lady of the World"
    Anna Eleanor Roosevelt was born in New York City on October 11, 1884. Her father was Elliott Roosevelt, President Theodore Roosevelt's younger brother and her mother was Anna Hall, a descendent of the Livingstons, a distinguished New York family. Both her parents died when she was a child, her mother in 1892, and her father in 1894. After her mother's death, Eleanor lived with her grandmother, Mrs. Valentine G. Hall, in Tivoli, New York. She was educated by private tutors until age 15, when she was sent to Allenswood, a school for girls in England, whose headmistress, Mademoiselle Marie Souvestre, had a great influence on her education and thinking. At age 18, Eleanor Roosevelt returned to New York where she resided with cousins. During that time she became involved in social service work, joined the Junior League and taught at the Rivington street Settlement House. During Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidency, Eleanor Roosevelt was an active First Lady who traveled extensively around the nation, visiting relief projects, surveying working and living conditions, and then reporting her observations to the President. She also exercised her own political and social influence; she became an advocate of the rights and needs of the poor, of minorities, and of the disadvantaged. In World War II, she visited England and the South Pacific to foster good will among the Allies and boost the morale of US servicemen overseas. After President Roosevelt's death on April 12, 1945, Mrs. Roosevelt continued public life. She was appointed by President Truman to the United States Delegation to the United Nations General Assembly, a position she held until 1953. She was chairman of the Human Rights Commission during the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights which was adopted by the General Assembly on December 10, 1948.

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